Category Archives: BC Politics

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Middle of the Road School Board Elected

VanRamblings | A New Board of Education Elected in Vancouver

Saturday night was quite the night in Vancouver politics.
At Vancouver City Council, voters chose a majority progressive Council, led by Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart, who will work with fellow progressives, the Green Party of Vancouver’s Adriane Carr, Pete Fry and Michael Wiebe, One City Vancouver’s Christine Boyle, and the conscience of the new and incoming Council, COPE’s Jean Swanson.
All of the above is not to say the cadre of five NPA Councillors who were elected to Council on Saturday evening are not progressive — they are. They’re just not in quite the hurry their ‘more progressive’ counterparts are to bring substantive change, much sooner than later.
At Park Board, it was pretty much the same story: three Greens and two COPE elected, five progressives on a renewed Vancouver Park Board.
At School Board, though? Tch, tch — naughty, naughty Vancouver voters.
One supposes that the most salutary outcome of Saturday’s election, in respect of Vancouver’s Board of Education newly-elected crew of trustees for office, is that the new make up of the Board will provide narrative fodder for The Straight’s first-rate education columnist, Patti Bacchus — who we expect shed some hot tears at Saturday night’s outcome (note. Patti is neither given to tears, nor other displays of emotion, given her stoic, working for the betterment of public education ethos).

School Board | Electeds | Vancouver civic election

No, what voters did on Saturday night, in electing a majority centrist / leaning right Vancouver School Board was just short of a high crime and misdemeanour, electing a contingent of mean well folks not ordinarily given to challenging the status quo or the provincial government. Except …

Yes, that’s newly-elected OneCity Vancouver elected Jennifer Reddy above — who, along with OneCity’s Christine Boyle (who ran for, and was elected to Council) represented our two favourite new candidates seeking elected office in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election. In time, you’ll see why.
Trustee-elect Reddy will play the same role on the incoming Board of Education, as did her OneCity running mate, Carrie Bercic (about whom we will be writing more in just a moment), the conscience of the School Board over the past year — who it was imperative be re-elected, but was not.
Trustee Jennifer Reddy, then, will emerge as the new conscience of the Board of Education (VanRamblings is looking forward to covering the new Board, and Ms. Reddy, in particular) — just listen to what incoming Trustee Reddy has to say in her campaign video, above.
At this juncture, VanRamblings wishes to say that for many (and for us) the most heartening outcome of the 2018 Vancouver civic election was the re-election of the entirely extraordinary Allan Wong to Vancouver’s Board of Education, who will begin his seventh term, and 20th year on the Board of Education next month. Allan Wong was the only candidate running for office with Vision Vancouver, elected to office on a devastating evening for a progressive political party of conscience that deserved better, much better.
On the progressive side of the ledger, Trustee Wong and incoming Trustee Reddy are joined by COPE’s Barb Parrott, who was just floating on air on Saturday night at COPE’s Election Night celebration, and about whom Patti Bacchus wrote the following in endorsing Ms. Parrott’s run for office …

Parrott is a retired teacher and vocal public-education advocate who would be a tremendous asset to the VSB. Parrott’s experience working in the school system has given her a deep understanding of what students need in order to be successful in school, and she would work hard to ensure the board is doing everything it can to guarantee that teachers have what they need to do the best job they can in their classrooms. Parrott is a past president of the Vancouver Elementary School Teachers’ Association (VESTA) and would be a valuable asset in helping the board build and maintain a respectful collaboration with its education partners.

All of the above said, VanRamblings is not unhappy about the re-election of the Greens’ Janet Fraser and Estrellita Gonzalez — both of whom VanRamblings endorsed — nor are we necessarily displeased with the re-election of the NPA’s Fraser Ballantyne, and his colleague, Carmen Cho.
For the moment, VanRamblings will hold our fire on Green newcomer, Lois Chan-Pedley, with whom we are not quite familiar — although, we are pleased voters elected a person of colour to office, in an election year when that proved to be an unusual circumstance. A young mother, and an accomplished woman, we hold out much hope for Ms. Chan-Pedley and the contribution she will make to the incoming Board of Education

Still and all, VanRamblings is verklempt that the conscience of the last Board of Education, Carrie Bercic, was not re-elected to office.
A correspondent asked us a couple of days back why Carrie Bercic was not re-elected? Without wishing to offend, VanRamblings offers the following …

  • As we did in the 2014 School Board by-election, when we sang Carrie Bercic’s praises to the skies, we failed to be as supportive (correspondents might suggest more accurate phraseology, such as “over-the moon” and “enthusiastically florid”) as we were in the 2017 School Board by-election. VanRamblings had enough readership in the past month so as to make a difference — and we failed to do so;

  • The NPA. The NPA got their vote out; witness the 5 elected at Council. There is no way under the sun that NPA voters would support Ms. Bercic’s re-election, as over the past year, Trustee Bercic emerged as the re-birth of public education advocate, Patti Bacchus. In an election with only a 38% voter turnout, and given how important the NPA has deemed School Board to be (we could say mean things, but we won’t), the NPA got their vote out in sufficient numbers so as to quash Trustee Bercic’s re-election. All of which leaves VanRamblings despondent;
  • Morgane Oger. Make no mistake, our admiration and respect for Ms. Oger is deep and abiding. VanRamblings believes, however (rightly or wrongly), that Morgane Oger’s last minute entrance into the run for School Board, and the 27,157 seventeenth place votes she secured, ended up taking votes away from Trustee Bercic, and her OneCity running mate, Erica Jaaf, both of whom are longtime, effective public education advocates;
  • NDP voters. Carrie Bercic challenged the status quo, and (respectfully) challenged B.C. Minister of Education, Rob Fleming. In other words, Carrie Bercic stood as a countervailing force to our hanging-by-a-thread provincial NDP government. VanRamblings surmises that there were enough NDP supporters in Vancouver who said to themselves when they arrived at the polls, “Carrie Bercic has proved a staunch defender of public education. But she’s also been critical of the NDP Minister of the Education, and our tremulous progressive NDP government. Gosh, maybe I should just vote for the progressive candidates running with the Greens and Vision Vancouver. Although, with the white guilt I’m feeling, I guess I’d better cast a vote for Jennifer Reddy, who seems articulate and bright, and perhaps not too challenging in her approach to governance. Yeah, Jennifer Reddy, that’s the ticket. Otherwise, I’ll plump my ballot.”

How voters failed to re-elect the strongest, most articulate democratic parent and child advocate in the city of Vancouver since Patti Bacchus left office in 2016, who has performed service on the Board of Education this past 12 months to a fair-thee-well, we just don’t know? But it’s done now.
Tears have been shed, and what might have been is no longer, and — if we might — VanRamblings believes we are all a little, perhaps more than a little, worse off that Carrie Bercic will not sit on the Vancouver School Board in this next term, as our public education advocate extraordinaire.
Carrie Bercic’s penetrating, insightful voice and presence at Vancouver’s Board of Education table, her keen intelligence and staunch advocacy of public education and the some 548,000 students enrolled in British Columbia schools, will be missed, more than words can express.
And you know who will miss her the most?

Vancouver Civic Election | Re-elected to School Board Candidates | Janet Fraser & Estrellita Gonzalez

The Greens’ Estrellita Gonzalez and Janet Fraser, who have sat at the Board table alongside Carrie Bercic this past 12 months, who more often than not voted with and advocated for Trustee Bercic. Returning Trustee Allan Wong, who always seconded Trustee Bercic’s motions, will miss her as a colleague, and for her support of his endeavours at the School Board table. The cause of public education is just a little worse off for the absence of Carrie Bercic as a clarion public education voice in the province of British Columbia.
We trust this is not the last we’ll hear from Ms. Bercic in the political realm.
One heartening election night note: 97,809 voters cast a ballot for Vancouver School Board, while for Council only 90,851 voters cast their ballot, and at Park Board, 95,834 — so something was going on when so many more voters in 2018 came to the polls to vote for School Board.
When all is said and done, the voters of Vancouver — at least the 38% of Vancouver voters who cared enough to vote — made their decision, as faulty as we believe that decision to be, given how imperative was the need to elect an activist Vancouver Board of Education who would staunchly defend our public education system, sitting around the Board table over the next four years, representing the largest, most diverse school district in Canada’s western most province, and long the Board of Education that has set the political education agenda in the province of British Columbia.
Godspeed to Vancouver’s incoming Board of Education.
May wisdom govern your decisions, and may your advocacy for student success remain your paramount endeavour this next four years.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Election Wrap-Up, Part 1

In the video above, newly-elected OneCity Vancouver City Councillor Christine Boyle says near the end of her victory speech …

“This is a pretty split Council. A pretty split body at every level. We are not going to move things easily without a lot of pressure from outside. We will continue you to need you to put that pressure on …”

With all due respect to Ms. Boyle, VanRamblings finds her remarks to the crowd of well-wishers and campaign volunteers at Saturday’s election night party to be not only ungenerous on a night of celebration for all the candidates who were victorious, and all the other candidates who ran campaigns of conscience, but to also be untrue & needlessly provocative.
Not to mention, just plain wrong & unbecoming of who we know her to be.
And while we’re at it, may we also add: dismissive of the humanity and integrity of her fellow newly electeds to Vancouver City Council — there’s nothing like passing judgment on people you’ve never met, we always say.
What a damn poor way to begin her tenure as a Vancouver City Councillor.
Whether Christine Boyle realizes it or not: Adriane Carr is a progressive who means well for our city.
Pete Fry is one of the humblest, most outstanding person of conscience and character we have ever met and worked with.
Melissa De Genova — for all that she is dismissed and demeaned in the ugly miasma that is Vancouver politics, by her own party and others, including in Ms. Boyle’s worrisome and intemperate remarks above — means well for our city, is far more progressive than she is given credit for, and is an elected who long ago earned our deep respect and admiration.
Jean Swanson = split Council? Uh, no.
Michael Wiebe ran, by far, the best and most expansive, not to mention, the most energized campaign of any of the candidates seeking office in the 2018 Vancouver civic election cycle, and was elected to office because he, too, is a person of conscience who means well for our city.

Newly-elected Vancouver City Councillor Christine Boyle out riding a bike with her son

Now you know, given that we spoke or otherwise communicated with newly-elected Councillor Boyle most days over the past six months, Christine Boyle might well have asked us of our informed assessment of the victorious candidates whose names appear above and below.
Newly-elected Councillor Boyle chose to do so. Why not? Oh, we could offer speculative reasons. Perhaps haughtiness on the part of Ms. Boyle, that she did not seek our counsel on those persons with whom she will now be employed as the people’s civic representative at City Hall the next 4 years?
Whatever the case, by the intemperate remarks made during her election night speech, Ms. Boyle has done damage (not irreparable damage, but damage nonetheless) to her near nascent term on Vancouver City Council, not to mention the damage she has unconsciously perpetrated on the well-meaning persons of conscience with whom she soon will be sitting at the circular table inside Council chambers at Vancouver City Hall.
Lisa Dominato, recent Vancouver School Board trustee, a person of conscience, and an accomplished woman of substance and political élan, Rebecca Bligh who, as we have written of her previously, just knocks our socks off and represents only one of two diversity City Councillors elected on Saturday evening, October 20th, and …
Sarah Kirby-Yung, whose “win” on Saturday night fills us with so much hope for our future that we are near to bursting.
A split Council, Ms. Boyle?
Not on your life. Your fellow Councillors represent accomplished women (8 WOMEN City Councillors — it is to weep with joy — women of conscience who, working with she and Mayor-elect Kennedy Stewart, WILL build the city we need). Does Ms. Boyle honestly think that the five Vancouver Non-Partisan Association City Councillors are going to oppose an affordable housing plan that includes co-and-co-op housing, and social housing built on City land, and federal and provincial Crown land? They’d be pretty nasty people if they did — nothing we know of at least four of the elected NPA Councillors would suggest them to be anything other than supporters of Vancouver City Hall’s gender variant policy, indigenous reconciliation strategy, women’s equity strategy, and who would stand foresquare, shoulder to shoulder with Ms. Boyle to support initiatives that oppose hate speech and conduct, and who would be anything less than supportive of environmental initiatives. Naïve, you say? That allegation was bandied about quite a bit during the election campaign, targeted to both Ms. Boyle & VanRamblings. Tch, tch. Nope ain’t havin’ any of it. No siree, Jane & Bob.

VanRamblings recognizes greatness in Christine BoylePublished the first time VanRamblings met Christine Boyle, back in March, at a COPE coalition exploratory meeting. We were inspired by her then, we’re still inspired by her

VanRamblings knows something about Christine Boyle she seems not to know about herself …

This past six months, Christine Boyle was a transformational candidate for civic office, and as an elected City Councillor, as a conciliator, as a person of conscience, as an inspirational figure on City Council who will not be denied, as the single individual on our new City Council best able to articulate what we all believe — and that includes her fellow newly-elected City Councillors — knows what must come to pass, she will find support.

Together, newly-elected Vancouver City Councillors Christine Boyle, Sarah Kirby-Yung, Pete Fry, Jean Swanson, Michael Wiebe, Rebecca Bligh, Adriane Carr, Lisa Dominato, Melissa De Genova and perhaps even Councillor Colleen Hardwick will, as we have written previously about Councillor Boyle, become just as smitten with our newly-elected OneCity Vancouver City Councillor as every other person who has ever met her — and who will come to feel compelled by this entirely tremendous catalyst of change for the better, on our incoming, progressive and change-making City Council.
Yes, in time, they too, these newly-electeds or returned-to-office City Councillors, will come to see within her what VanRamblings knows exists within her: that, as is the case with her very special and meaningful for our city fellow newly-electeds, Christine Boyle is a good person, a person who means well for our city, who will be a participant in the process of helping all of her fellow electeds realize their dreams for achieving the city we need, the city we need for all of us.

Councillor Elects on Civic Election Night in Vancouver, B.C., on Saturday, October 20, 2018

Park Board | Electeds | 2018 Vancouver civic election

School Board | Electeds | Vancouver civic election

Vancouver Votes 2018 | VanRamblings’ Endorsement Lists

VanRamblings | 2018 Vancouver civic election Endorsement List | Council | School Board | Park Board

VanRamblings urges you to take this list to the polls when you vote, referring to the graphic while looking at your smart phone. Easy enough to copy the graphic, and place it into your photos app. Otherwise, you can print VanRamblings’ endorsement list — as hundreds have — and take it to the polls. We flat out guarantee that this is the City Council, School Board and Park Board you want to elect on Saturday, October 20th!

VanRamblings’ City Council endorsement rationale is available here.

VanRamblings’ School Board endorsement rationale is available here.

VanRamblings | 2018 Vancouver civic election School Board Endorsements

VanRamblings’ Park Board endorsement rationale may be found here.

Vancouver Park Board Office

VanRamblings’ all women slate for Council may be found here.

2018 Vancouver civic election | Endorsed Woman Candidates for Office

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Christine Boyle, City Council | Must-Elect

More than any other candidate seeking office in the 2018 Vancouver civic election, VanRamblings believes that it is important that you cast a vote for Christine Boyle when arriving at the polls this upcoming Saturday.
This week, Vancouver voters are presented with the opportunity to cast a ballot for our town’s most environmentally responsible, progressive, qualified, socially conscious and ‘can do’ activist candidate seeking a seat on Vancouver City Council in our city’s current civic election.
Christine Boyle, for those of you who don’t know her, is a minister at the Canadian Memorial United Church at 15th and Burrard, a climate change & environmental activist, and a gifted community organizer who, with her partner Seth, parent their two children in the Grandview neighbourhood.
With a Bachelor of Science degree in urban agriculture and First Nations studies from the University of British Columbia, and a Master’s degree in religious leadership for social change from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California, the pillars of Christine Boyle’s civic election platform involve implementing an affordable housing action plan, greater community participation in decisions affecting the lives of citizens across our city, a focus on renewed action to fight climate change, and ensuring “strong and compassionate public services” to serve the interests of the public.
In the months since we began writing on Vancouver’s municipal election, VanRamblings has come to believe that only with the participation of Christine Boyle at the Council table will those of us who live in Vancouver realize the resolution of the social and economic ills that plague our city.

Christine Boyle, "It's time to tackle Vancouver's deepening wealth gap"

VanRamblings has identified Christine Boyle as a member of the historic trinity of change candidates — the other two members of this trinity, the Greens’ Pete Fry & COPE’s Derrick O’Keefe — who working together with their party running mates will effectively work to build the city we need. I’ll
What does all of the above mean for you, for your life in the city, and the livability of Vancouver going forward? As is the case with must-elects Pete Fry and Derrick O’Keefe, Christine Boyle is committed to …

  • Public amenities. After 10 years of woeful underfunding of Vancouver’s parks and recreation system, Christine Boyle is committed to the growth and renewal of this critical public infrastructure;

  • Affordable housing in every neighbourhood. Christine Boyle’s one city for all programme recognizes housing as a human right; she will work to build 3500 units a year of low cost housing for millennials, seniors, working people earning under $55,000 a year, with a mix of co-and-co-op housing, social housing and rental buildings where residents would pay no more than 30% of their income on meeting their housing needs.

    Christine Boyle on City Council will work with her fellow Councillors to set a goal of 50% below-market-rate housing, built on city-owned land, as well as provincial & federal Crown land, on a leasehold basis, construction costs to be paid through developer community amenity contributions, federal and provincial funding, and a speculation land value capture tax;

  • Enhancing and building on Vancouver’s Greenest City Action Plan. From working to make walking, cycling and public transit the preferred transportation options, to leading the world in green building design, eliminating Vancouver’s dependence on fossil fuels, creating a zero waste economy, ensuring that we have the cleanest air and water of any city in the world, and creating incomparable access to our green spaces, Christine Boyle is the environmental candidate in the 2018 election;
  • Small business. Christine Boyle is committed to lowering small business tax, while having major corporate business pay a fairer share of tax.

Christine Boyle, in concert with her fellow City Councillors, will work with the provincial government to shorten the timelines for rollout of $10-a-day child care, while also making known the need for more money for transit, community shuttle bus, and overnight Skytrain and Canada Line service.

Christine Boyle, "Together we can change the way Vancouver is headed."

Child care centres established in housing co-op developments, as is the case at the 135-unit Railyard Housing Co-op, built on city land, the construction and materials paid for by Concert Properties through an arrangement with Vancouver’s Community Land Trust, a re-opening of The Playhouse as a year-round theatre company servicing all other theatre companies in Vancouver, continuity of care seniors housing built in every neighbourhood, and keeping our streets and our boulevards clean and groomed so it might once more be said that Vancouver is not only the most beautiful city on the continent, but the cleanest and most welcoming city.

OneCity Vancouver co-founders, Christine Boyle, Cara Ng, and Alison AtkinsonOneCity Vancouver co-founders, Christine Boyle, Cara Ng, and Alison Atkinson (Anna Chudnovsky missing from photo) working during last year’s Vancouver civic by-election

A troubling feature of the 2018 Vancouver civic election is, as Christine Boyle writes on her campaign website, “the toxic tone of politics online.”
Whether it be from the left or from the right, women candidates in the 2018 Vancouver civic election have too often found themselves the target of nasty commentary about their candidacies, and that includes — we are sad to report — One City’s Christine Boyle, who was able, in a reasoned manner to respond to noxious online commentary with a measured tone.

Christine Boyle, OneCity Vancouver candidate for City Council, takes Joseph Jones to the woodshed

The word most often employed by those who have either just met her, or who have known Christine Boyle for awhile, is smitten. How could anyone not be? Just watch the video above, and listen to what Christine Boyle has to say, and you will come to realize — as all of the other candidates in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election acknowledge — Christine Boyle is a transformational candidate for Vancouver City Council, and perhaps the single most important candidate for civic office of our lifetime.

VanRamblings | 2018 Vancouver civic election Endorsement List | Council | School Board | Park Board

VanRamblings urges you to take this list to the polls when you vote, referring to the graphic while looking at your smart phone. Easy enough to copy the graphic, and place it into your photos app. Otherwise, you can print VanRamblings’ endorsement list — as hundreds have — and take it to the polls. We flat out guarantee that this is the City Council, School Board and Park Board you want to elect on Saturday, October 20th!

VanRamblings’ City Council endorsement rationale is available here.
VanRamblings’ School Board endorsement rationale is available here.
VanRamblings’ Park Board endorsement rationale may be found here.
VanRamblings’ all women slate for Council may be found here.

2018 Vancouver civic election | Endorsed Woman Candidates for Office